Today we launched our new GearUp Spread-the-Word Sweeps and we’ll giveaway a Reunion Blues/Fender® guitar prize package that grows the more you share. Simply “Like” the Reunion Blues Facebook page and complete our entry form on Facebook to enter. If we get 5000+ “Likes” by the end of the sweeps you could win our Platinum Prize Package which includes a Reunion Blues RB Continental Case, a Reunion Blues Merino Wool Guitar Strap, a Fender® Custom Shop Stratocaster® and a Fender® ’65 Deluxe Twin Reverb Amp worth a total retail value of $5000.
I love my neighborhood. The sounds of birds in the trees and kids playing ball in the park around the corner are typical background sounds on Spring and Summer weekend mornings, when my wife and I like to enjoy the sunshine while having our coffee out on the patio.
A couple of Sundays ago, another voice was added to our usual weekend soundscape – that of a beginning violinist, practicing hard on one particular piece. I couldn’t tell where it was coming for certain but what I could tell was that they have not been playing for long. It was obvious that they were limping through Minuet in G Major, a fairly well known tune generally attributed to J.S. Bach.
Not every bystander can withstand this level of music-making for extended periods of time. The late comedian Jack Benny made the most of this fact. However, this was – literally and figuratively – music to my ears. I believe that learning to play a musical instrument is a sure-fire way for any person to enrich their own life. I am convinced that learning music is especially helpful to young people in their formative years, on so many levels that we may not yet have identified them all.
I try to encourage anyone who is first learning a musical instrument to keep at it, because I know from experience that eventually they will be rewarded with a sense of personal satisfaction by their accomplishment. Besides that, once a person has practiced enough to play confidently so that the tune really comes across, other people will enjoy it too. I guarantee there is no other high that compares to receiving the sincere applause of an audience.
Hearing this creaky version of Minuet in G Major took me back to my own childhood, when I’d be hard at work practicing scales and basic tunes on my trumpet at home. My stepfather, Charlie, always let me know how I was coming along. Whenever he’d pass the closed door of my bedroom on his way down the hall, he’d say“Hey, give it a rest why don’t you!?” Or “I thought I told you to knock that off!!” Ah, the sweet memories of my youth!
Seriously though, this sort of critique can really stifle the muse for someone just starting a musical path. If a beginner is “on the fence” about whether to keep working on tone and timing or throw in the towel and start Tae Kwon Do lessons instead, advice from guys like my stepfather can send a young player straight to the Dojo… after returning the violin to the music store on the way there. Knowing this, I tried to think of how to send a message of encouragement to this unseen novice serenading us from somewhere across the street, however unintentional and tentative that serenade may have been.
I remembered a pop hit from back in the ‘60s (I confess that I am old enough to remember when it was getting lots of airplay on AM radio) which was based on Minuet in G Major. The melody is about all I could remember of it, but thankfully this is the 21st century and in a few short minutes I found a YouTube video of The Toys performing A Lover’s Concerto from a 1965 TV episode of Hullabaloo. Pay dirt!
This pop tune is in 4/4 time, whereas Minuet in G Major is in 3/4 . It’s performed by a vocal trio, so it has lyrics – the original is strictly instrumental. The pop version changes key several times, probably arranged that way an attempt to keep it interesting enough for pop consumers used to three minute dance numbers with a hook of some kind. But the tune is indelible. You can speed it up or slow it down, change the key or the meter, add lyrics or take them away. Regardless, that unmistakable melody shines through.
About the time I had confirmed that this video was what I was looking for, I noticed the change in the background sounds. My novice violinist had gone quiet. Was he/ she finished with practicing for the day? Were they feeling too timid to keep it up? Was some counterpart of Charlie intervening on behalf of annoyed parents everywhere? I cranked the volume on the ‘puter and hit “play.”
How gentle is the rain That falls softly on the meadow, Birds high up the trees Serenade the clouds with their melodies…
…And so on. It’s a pretty lightweight number, to be honest. But that melody is just so catchy! It has been catching people’s fancy for at least 285 years, at this point. A good tune will do that. This is what is meant by “timeless.” I’m sure that some of my neighbors were just as annoyed by my blasting A Lover’s Concerto as they were about having to listen to creaky violin playing. But they were far from my thoughts. I was hoping that my beginner had heard, and noticed that melody. I wanted to say “check it out – I heard you, and I know the song you’re playing. Good work, you’re getting it! Don’t stop!” But not knowing who to say it to, or where to find them, I could think of no way to accomplish this. No way, that is, other than to send a musical message out toward their general direction, and hope for the best. Maybe it worked. I can’t really say. I can report that about five minutes after the video ended, that voice began Minuet in G Major once again. I thought it sounded less “limpy,” and a little bit more confident that time. In fact I’m sure of it.
Share your stories of learning to play an instrument. Did you have words of encouragement all the way through? Or, did you have someone like Charlie keeping you down? Let us know!
If you haven’t seen it yet on the Reunion Blues artist page we recently added one of the most talented and inspiring cellists out there to the RB artist roster, Tina Guo. She has developed quite an international following throughout her career as a musician playing everything from classical cello all the way to rock/metal/fusion electric cello.
Now Tina adds to her vast repertoire by touring with the Michael Jackson: The Immortal World Tour by Cirque du Soleil. Starting in October, 2011 they’ll embark on a 14 month long journey throughout Canada and the U.S. and add plenty more people to her international following I’m sure.
Be sure to check Tina Guo’s Facebook page and all of her awesome videos as well. Congrats Tina and thanks for using your Reunion Blues gig bag to protect your instrument.
Wish you could have been there to witness this 1/4 million dollar Bentley Continental GT rolling into the Reunion Blues booth last night. – This video was shot at about 4:45 this morning, right after they turned on the house lights. – Good times!
We came across this real-world conversation about Reunion Blues on the Telecaster.com web site. This is one GREAT web site and the banter isn’t bad either!
Mike Kinal crafts incredible guitars and basses. Here’s what he has to say about Reunion Blues.
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“I bought my first Reunion Blues Bag back in 1988 and decided then that these were the cases for my guitars. The new Continental Series reinforces my opinion – best cases on the planet.”
Killswitch Engage is no stranger to travel. They tour the world.
Adam and Joel are two of the hardest working musicians out there on that road… and their break-neck schedule can also be hard on their gear. Maybe that’s why they chose to endorse the RB Continental. Then again, maybe it’s because they just look so cool carrying their axes around in these killer cases.
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Either way, all of us at Reunion blues are honored and excited to have Killswitch Engage as the newest member of our elite group of Reunion Blues endorsers.
At Reunion Blues we are expanding out popular RB Continental line with the introduction of a new triple trumpet case that combines sleek contemporary design with the ultimate in instrument protection.
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On the outside, a 1″ thick shock-absorbing Flexoskeleton™ exterior is lined with reinforced impact panels, and a knurled abrasion grid covers the bottom to help resist scuffing. A large zippered accessory pocket is also provided, along with an adjustable shoulder strap.
A unique, padded, wide-mouth lid opens to a hidden accessory pocket and reveals a very roomy interior that features adjustable dividers providing custom space allocation for securing trumpets, mutes and accessories… all crafted with a plush, quilted “double helix” velvet lining, one of the trademarks of the new RB Continental case line.
A Ballistic Quadraweave™ exterior features high-strength corded edges and all seams are double-stitched with high tensile thread and reinforced at tested stress points. This new case also includes a Zero-G palm-contoured handle with weight distributing foam core to help reduce hand fatigue when the case is carried over long distances.